Late and have always been a lurker so apologies for my newfag account, but as someone who's long wanted a decent women's space online, I'm curious to ask about what the overall culture for a platform like this is envisioned to be. Everyone is focused on the verification aspect but assuming that works, I'm concerned about what using the platform would actually be like.
What is the intended audience for this beyond just "real women"? Is this supposed to be a free for all shitposting zone or a more serious and respectable discussion group? I.e., is it going to consist of only female autists ironically joking and venting or could a relatively normie woman who's casually uncomfortable with freaks online post genuinely from the heart without getting dunked on? Are users allowed to infight, sperg out, or behave deviantly so long as they're true and honest women, or is that behavior frowned upon with civility and harmony as a goal? I know the answer is that the users would form the culture themselves but I'm asking about what the target vision here is.
The problem is that most platforms and communities are unwilling to take a hardline stance, and the ones who are explicitly female-centric tend to be too fringe and insane to be decent as a general purpose women's group, especially for a more serious topic such as women's health conditions. Ovarit is specifically centered around trans and radfem related discussion and any mundane everyday or personal topics are dead on arrival because the platform is inherently politically charged—you can't have a decent discussion on your hobbies or ask for advice or whatever unless it's somehow related to the site's ideology. LCF, while formally dedicated to gossip, does have robust activity on their off-topic boards. However, it also attracts unhinged people who infight over the smallest nonsense and various threads make it clear that the userbase consists largely of very maladjusted and unstable women, making it annoying to use for those who aren't interested in baiting or falling for bait (it's well-known that men often post there, but this doesn't negate that point). I haven't touched CC in a long time since it was constantly being encumbered by gore/cp raids and like many others, I got mysteriously banned without explanation for presumably being accused of being male. There are various niche female communities which are generally left alone by men due to small size and alienating subject matters (e.g., fujo or kpop spergery) but once again they serve a very narrow audience and topic.
Unfortunately the truth is that even women who are completely against having men/identity pandering/etc. in their hobby/interest/support group are going to find far more practical use in just sucking it up and ignoring the occasional annoying maleposter or politics shiller in an active popular group that allows them (e.g., most subreddits) than they would find in a 100% pure female group that's low activity or full of extremist women who ONLY talk about hating men/etc. and won't hold a normal conversation. There is a difference in wanting a group that's woman-centered and properly gatekept against men vs. wanting a group for nonstop ranting about your manifesto on how much you hate men. Simply achieving a zero-male space for the sake of the concept isn't worth it imo unless the platform is actually more useful than existing platforms. I mean, if you rounded up numerous female cows and put them in their own platform, it'd be entertaining and it would be male-free, but it doesn't improve the issue of women not having usable spaces to discuss normal topics with each other in peace, it just serves in being provacative. That's why I'm concerned about what the platform will be like after the issue of verification and infiltration; if it ends up being unhinged or inactive or a zealous misandrist containment zone it will not have actually helped the root issue even if it accomplishes the no men goal.
I love imageboard formats but if the platform is considering an imageboard-esque style, I think we all know what type of people imageboards tend to attract. If the target audience is going to be kept to "the type of woman who'd be on an imageboard" (i.e., autistic, overly online, likely NEET or NEET-like tendencies), what would encourage the platform to be high effort, active, and useful for everyday topics rather than just LCF 2.0: Now With Less Scrotefoiling? If the target audience is going to be expanded to more normie-leaning women who just find male inclusion in women's spaces to be distasteful, how will they be reached, especially with the alienating foundation of being associated with KF?
I'm in support of the idea and would even tentatively be willing to go for verification but I'd like to see it fleshed out more beyond "app for women". Mainly my dream is to have a place where women can be free of the uber-progressive ultra pro inclusion mentality that you see in a lot of online women's spaces without veering into paranoid infighting and inutile sperging in exchange.